Peter Cartwright, Legendary Frontier Preacher

by Robert Bray

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Book cover for Peter Cartwright, Legendary Frontier Preacher

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Believing deeply that the gospel touched every aspect of a person's life, Peter Cartwright was a man who held fast to his principles, resulting in a life of itinerant preaching and thirty years of political quarrels with Abraham Lincoln. Peter Cartwright, Legendary Frontier Preacher is the first full-length biography of this most famous of the early nineteenth-century Methodist circuit-riding preachers. Robert Bray tells the full story of the long relationship between Cartwright and Lincoln, including their political campaigns against each other, their social antagonisms, and their radical disagreements on the Christian religion, as well as their shared views on slavery and the central fact of their being "self-made." In addition, the biography examines in close detail Cartwright's instrumental role in Methodism's bitter "divorce" of 1844, in which the southern conferences seceded in a remarkable prefigurement of the United States a decade later. Finally, Peter Cartwright attempts to place the man in his appropriate national context: as a potent "man of words" on the frontier, a self-authorizing "legend in his own time," and, surprisingly, an enduring western literary figure.
  • ISBN10 1283135558
  • ISBN13 9781283135559
  • Publish Date 1 January 2005
  • Publish Status Active
  • Out of Print 17 February 2015
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint University of Illinois Press
  • Format eBook
  • Pages 336
  • Language English